Colwell D D, Kavaliers M
Agriculture Canada Research Station, Lethbridge, Alberta.
Physiol Behav. 1990 Sep;48(3):397-401. doi: 10.1016/0031-9384(90)90334-z.
Mosquitoes and other biting flies are natural aversive stimuli commonly encountered by wild and domestic animals and by humans. We observed that male mice exposed for 30 min to a low density of female mosquitoes (Aedes togoi) displayed significant increases in nociceptive responses which were indicative of the induction of analgesia. This analgesia was blocked by the prototypic opiate antagonist naloxone (1.0 mg/kg). Exposure to a novel stimulus had no significant effect on nociception, whereas 30 min of restraint stress induced a naloxone-reversible analgesia qualitatively similar to that observed after exposure to mosquitoes. Confinement in a small chamber for 30 min also had a significant analgesic effect whose amplitude and duration were markedly potentiated by concurrent exposure to mosquitoes. These results show that exposure to mosquitoes, and likely other biting flies, both induces an opioid-mediated analgesia and augments the analgesic effects of other stressful stimuli.
蚊子和其他叮咬性苍蝇是野生动物、家畜和人类常见的天然厌恶刺激物。我们观察到,雄性小鼠在低密度雌性蚊子(东乡伊蚊)环境中暴露30分钟后,伤害性反应显著增加,这表明诱导了镇痛作用。这种镇痛作用可被典型的阿片类拮抗剂纳洛酮(1.0毫克/千克)阻断。暴露于新刺激对伤害感受无显著影响,而30分钟的束缚应激诱导了一种与接触蚊子后观察到的定性相似的纳洛酮可逆性镇痛作用。在小室中禁闭30分钟也有显著的镇痛作用,同时接触蚊子可显著增强其幅度和持续时间。这些结果表明,接触蚊子以及可能的其他叮咬性苍蝇,既诱导了阿片类介导的镇痛作用,又增强了其他应激刺激的镇痛效果。